Abstract

Inflammatory bowel diseases have an increased risk of infections due to immunosuppressive therapies. To report the immunization status according to previous recommendations and the reasons explaining a delay, a questionnaire was filled in by the pediatric gastroenterologist, concerning outpatients, in six tertiary centers and five local hospitals, in a study, from May to November 2011. One hundred and sixty-five questionnaires were collected, of which 106 Crohn's diseases, 41 ulcerative colitis, and 17 indeterminate colitis. Sex ratio was 87:78M/F. Median age was 14.4years old (4.2-20.0). One hundred and nine patients (66%) were receiving or had received an immunosuppressive therapy (azathioprine, infliximab, methotrexate, or prednisone). Vaccines were up to date according to the vaccine schedule of French recommendations in 24% of cases and according to the recommendations for inflammatory bowel disease in 4% of cases. Coverage by vaccine was the following: diphtheria-tetanus-poliomyelitis 87%, hepatitis B 38%, pneumococcus 32%, and influenza 22%. Immunization delay causes were as follows: absence of proposal 58%, patient refusal 41%, fear of side effects 33%, and fear of disease activation 5%. Therefore, immunization coverage is insufficient in children with inflammatory bowel disease, due to simple omission or to refusal. A collaboration with the attending physicians and a targeted information are necessary.

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